Suttmeier, Richard P.
2007-08-10T20:34:00Z
2007-08-10T20:34:00Z
1982
US-China Scientific Cooperation: An An Assessment of the First Two Years, by Richard P. Suttmeier (1980-1981)
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/4820
149 p.
This study was funded by the Department of State under contract #1751-000372.
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United States -- Foreign relations -- China
China -- Foreign relations -- United States
United States -- Foreign relations -- 1981-1989
U.S. - P.R.C. Scientific Cooperation: An Assessment of the First Two Years
Working Paper

Suttmeier, Richard P.
2007-08-10T19:22:43Z
2007-08-10T19:22:43Z
1998
In Allison L. de Cerreno and Alexander Keynan (eds.). Scientific Cooperation, State Conflict: The Role of Scientists in Mitigating International Discord. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. Vol. 866. 1998.
0077-8923
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/4818
28 p.
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New York Academy of Sciences
Scientific Cooperation and Conflict Management in U.S.–China Relations from 1978 to the Present
Article

Cao, Cong
Suttmeier, Richard P.
2007-08-10T18:41:04Z
2007-08-10T18:41:04Z
2001-12
The China Quarterly. 168:960-984. (December, 2001)
0305-7410
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/4815
25 p.
This paper is part of a larger study of the changing nature of the Chinese scientific
community. We acknowledge with gratitude support for this research from the U.S. National
Science Foundation (SBR-9810256).
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London : School of Oriental and African Studies
China’s New Scientific Elite: Distinguished Young Scientists, the Research Environment and Hopes for Chinese Science
Article

Suttmeier, Richard P.
2007-08-10T18:40:10Z
2007-08-10T18:40:10Z
2004
Publshed in Ashley Tellis and Michael Wills (eds.). Strategic Asia 2004-05: Confronting Terrorism in the Pursuit of Power. Seattle. The National Bureau of Asian Research. 2004, p. 457-492.
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/4813
36 p.
While prospects for scientific and technological development vary across
Asian countries, most states in the region see science and technology as
critical for the achievement of national goals and are developing new policies
for research and innovation. This chapter examines indicators of the
upward trend of technological development in Asia, and interprets these
in light of the globalization of science and technology, the growth of global
production networks in high technology fields, and the emergence of
new science-based industries. Of special note is the growing international
importance of China and India, and increasing intra-regional cooperation
in science and technology. These developments create new challenges for
the United States in reconciling the security interests of the war on terrorism
with long-term interests in maintaining international leadership in science
and engineering.
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National Bureau of Asian Research
A New World In the Making?
Book chapter

Cao, Cong
2007-08-10T18:42:26Z
2007-08-10T18:42:26Z
2004
Asian Survey, Vol. 44, Issue 5, pp. 647–668 (Sept./Oct. 2004)
0004-4687
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/4817
22 p.
This essay examines the development of China’s high-tech parks and, in particular,
the challenges they have encountered. It concludes that lack of institutional
support for innovation and the indigenous technological capabilities
necessary to be competitive, unclear ownership, lack of venture capital, and
the overwhelming role of government have impeded the efforts of China’s
high-tech parks to duplicate the success of role models such as Silicon Valley.
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Regents of the University of California
Zhongguancun and China's High-tech Parks in Transition
Article

Suttmeier, Richard P.
2007-08-10T18:39:49Z
2007-08-10T18:39:49Z
2007-02-10
The New Scientist, Feb. 10, 2007, p. 46-47
0262-4079
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/4812
2 p.
Review of: The writing on the wall: China and the west in the 21st Century by Will Hutton.
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Reed Business Information Ltd.
The Next Great Leap Forward
Article